Photo Embroidery

I love when artists combine crafting with another medium. Mexican textile artist Victoria Villasana has paired vintage photographs of cultural icons and artists with brightly colored embroidery floss. The result reminds me of Fair Isle knitting and is unexpected and really interesting! Original article found here.


Colorfully Embroidered Vintage Photos of Artists and Cultural Icons by Victoria Villasana

CHRISTOPHER JOBSON

Working with appropriated vintage photographs of artists, musicians, and politicians, Mexican textile artist Victoria Villasana applies a colorfully whimsical layer of embroidery atop each image. Criss-crosses of color and bright highlights around the eyes seem to lend a sense of empowerment to the works which often depict feminist icons from singer Nina Simone to artist Frida Kahlo. Villasana also takes her works into the streets and creates hybrid yarn bomb paste-ups from small stickers to entire murals. You can see more of her recent work on Instagram.

House of Faberge Cowl

Having an artist mother and a father who is very appreciative of the arts (and can draw a mean stick figure, hi dad!) I was brought up being very at home in art museums. We'd visit the MFA in Boston frequently, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, take day trips to museums further out, and pop into galleries. When at RISD I often found myself roaming the halls of the RISD Museum for inspiration and peace. Art appreciation is ingrained into my DNA and is such an imperative part of our existence.

There are a handful of shows that stick out in my mind as favorites - Picasso's Blue Period, David Hockney's Canyons, Monet's haystacks, Takashi Murakami, The Art of the Tiara - all at the MFA in Boston, all of which my mom took me to. Gerard Richter at MOMA, Rothko at the National Gallery of Art. Another of my two favorites were shows I saw at the Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art (yes, the Bellagio in Vegas has an art gallery, who knew?). My parents took me there for my 21st birthday (yes, my parents are that cool and it was an incredible trip) and Steve Martin's art collection was on display (the man has impeccable taste in art). Another show I saw there a few years later was a collection of items from the House of Faberge and it was spectacular.

Faberge was of course made famous by the Russian Tsar Alexander Romanov III and the whimsical and priceless Easter eggs he commissioned for his wife, Empress Maria Fedorovna. Our friends at Wikipedia tell us, "The House of Fabergé is a jewellery firm founded in 1842 in St. Petersburg, Imperial Russia, by Gustav Faberge. The firm has been famous for designing elaborate jewel-encrusted Fabergé eggs for the Russian Tsars and a range of other work of high quality and intricate details." Not only were some of the eggs on display, but jewelry, frames, snuff boxes, pins, etc. I do love shiny, sparkly things and this show captured my imagination. We went back twice!

It was this show that my mom and I wandered into by chance that inspired my latest design, the House of Faberge Cowl. Knit in Neighborhood Fiber Co's Studio Worsted, this cowl uses all of the MC (blue) and most of the CC (ochre), giving it a very nice weight and drape. Begun with a provisional cast on and knit in a very long tube, the cowl gets folded into itself and kitchnered together, creating an endless design with no wrong side. The hand dyed yarn creates a look similar to the hand painted enamel that was part of most of Faberge's creations, and the complimentary color scheme is bright and beautiful.

I've been very into slip-stitch colorwork lately, a technique that differs from Fair Isle because the colors are not stranded across the back, making it quick to knit. Only one color at a time is used while the other is left behind at the beginning of the round. Certain stitches are slipped and therefore elongated, creating an interesting illusion and texture. This cowl would be lovely in a gradient/solid combo, or even striped. I am completely in love with the weight of this cowl because it uses almost 700 yards of worsted. I brought it to a few of my workshops recently as an example of alternate colorwork and it was a crowd favorite! One student wore it the entire class and didn't want to give it back!

Art is so important to our history, our culture, and our souls. I was incredibly fortunate to have parents that recognized this and cared enough to educate me and bring me to countless exhibits and galleries growing up. I wear this cowl and think of them, and hope my children will learn to appreciate art as much as I do.

Download the House of Faberge Cowl here.

 

Magically Delicious Hat

Frosted Lucky Charms? They're magically delicious!

Lucky Charms have always had a place in my life. As a child, my brother and I were allowed to pick a "birthday cereal" - a box of cereal that the birthday girl or boy would choose and not have to share with anyone else in the house. If that wasn't special enough, it was our one chance a year to get the cereal that had the highest sugar content possible without a peep from mom or dad, eat it at the table while smirking at the sibling who was not allowed to touch said birthday cereal, make it last for weeks - often to the point where it was stale because we just didn't want that magic to end - run off to school with an epic sugar high, then wait for our birthday to roll around again and repeat the cycle. The short-lived Rainbow Brite cereal was my all-time favorite, yet most of the time, in the supermarket on my birthday I reached for that box of Lucky Charms.

My husband also grew up loving Lucky Charms (he still does), and we often find ourselves at Costco, him putting the giant double box of Lucky Charms in the cart, me complaining that it takes up too much room, he pretending that he's buying it for our son (who also loves it), followed by weeks of me picking up discarded dishes of plain cereal around the house, picked clean of the Technicolor marshmallows that are peppered in with the boring oats. My BFF Heather from The Lemonade Shop also loves this particular cereal, so apparently it's a national phenomenon.

While discussing Lucky Charms one day, Heather and I came up with the idea for a Lucky Charms-inspired hat. Enter in the Magically Delicious Hat, a slouchy hat bedecked with Fair Isle marshmallow motifs inspired by the cereal we all know and love in a riot of color - make that a SPARKLY riot of color. That's right, not only is it magically delicious and rainbowtastic, this little beauty sparkles thanks to The Lemonade Shop's Sparkle DK yarn in snow, bunny nose, pumpkin, duckling, grasshopper, sailor, and grapeape colorways.

Knit up on US 4 (3.5mm) circular needles, the corrugated ribbed brim jumps quickly into pink heart, orange star, yellow moon, green clover, blue diamond, and purple lucky horseshoe marshmallow motifs. Topped of with a jaunty pom-pom, this hat makes you a member of a secret society that proudly proclaims our love for Lucky Charms. The stranded colorwork chart is easy and is a perfect beginner Fair Isle project or holiday gift for your fellow cereal lovers. Did I mention that it sparkles?

If you find yourself at Rhinebeck's Sheep & Wool Festival in New York this weekend, be sure to check out the unofficial start of the festivities at Indie Untangled on Friday night. This excellent gathering of indie dyers includes The Lemonade Shop and she'll have exclusive Rhinebeck-only kits to make your very own Magically Delicious Hat!

Pour yourself a bowl of Lucky Charms and download the Magically Delicious Hat here.

Retrotastic Baby Blanket

I'm just home from teaching at Knitter's Day Out in Harrisburg, PA. While my voice is a bit worse for the wear after 9 hours of teaching, I always come home from retreats feeling energized. I love meeting new students, watching people sit down apprehensively in a lace or Fair Isle class, then leave bursting with confidence. There was a wonderful marketplace and a few hanks of minimally processed, undyed wool ended up in my bag for some personal knitting. Using the natural colors of the sheep for colorwork is sometimes referred to as "Shetland knitting," and I'm excited to get that going on my needles. I'm an equal-opportunity colorwork knitter. While Fair Isle will always be my first love, and I'll only knit intarsia when forced, I've really gotten inspired by mosaic or slip-stitch colorwork lately. What's the difference? With Fair Isle or stranded colorwork, you carry both yarns across each round with you, making a double-thick fabric that strands along the wrong side. Intarsia is worked with wrapped bobbins over a small portion, and mosaic or slip-stitch has multiple colors, but only one is worked at a time while the other is slipped. This makes a less-dense fabric than Fair Isle, but the elongated stitches that were slipped create an interesting illusion, and in my opinion, it's faster than the others and creates a unique texture.

Since I assumed we'd be getting into the full swing of autumn around here because it's October (boy, was I wrong - the heat and humidity just won't leave) I wanted to design a slip-stitch baby blanket that could double as a "lapghan" - bigger than your average baby blanket but smaller than an afghan. On cool fall evenings, we like to sit outside and watch our son run around the yard, playing on his swing set, the baby cuddled up against one of us and perhaps even a fire going in the fire pit. The leaves are falling, the air is crisp, and we have a lot of critters back there to watch - turtles, chipmunks, squirrels, and snakes. I like the idea of a blanket designed to keep the baby warm, but have it be big enough that I could wrap myself up a bit also and really trap that heat and warmth in.

I've knit with the Fiberists Audubon Worsted before and enjoyed the softness of the 100% superwash merino fiber, the bright colors, and the crisp stitch definition. I particularly like working with local dyers and Reggie and Spencer are just a few towns over. Armed with a throwback palette from my childhood - bright pink and purple - the Retrotastic Baby Blanket knits up quickly. Knit on US 8 (5mm) needles and a little over 600 yards of each color, this blanket is worked back and forth in the mosaic or slip-stitch colorwork technique. Each color is worked for 2 rows, then switched with the other. The result is a garter stitch diamond motif with plenty of contrast and texture to keep baby happy. Garter stitch motifs block out well and with a finished size of 31" x 40", there's plenty of room with everyone with this brightly patterned blanket.

With a simple chart and only knits, purls, and slipped stitches, this is the perfect fall blanket (if it ever gets cold, that is). Imagine it knit up in black and white, red and pink, green and yellow... The possibilities are endless! The weather this time of year can turn on a dime, and I can't wait to wrap my daughter and I up and have a retro-colored snuggle fest.

Download the Retrotastic Baby Blanket here.